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I am a director of the Grameen-Intel JV Social biz, and am a mentor of various social micro biz's with global multiplier potential. I am also a TiE Charter memeber. & am myself interested in applied research in the area of SE. I am a social ent myself and direct a globally scalable IT enabled agro services business targeting the enrichment of small farmers. Please can you send me the ppt itself...seems very interesting. my email id is srinivas.b.garudachar@intel.com
thanks

Peter Drucker’s views :

Peter Drucker’s views “Innovation is the specific tool of entrepreneurs, the means by which they exploit changes as an opportunity for a different business or a different service. It is capable of being presented as a discipline, capable of being learned and practised. Entrepreneurs need to search purposefully for the sources of innovation, the changes and their symptoms that indicate opportunities for sucessful innovation. And they need to know and to apply the principles of successful innovation.”

Entrepreneurship in Academics :

Entrepreneurship in Academics All Universities, IIMs and IITs
Management Development Institute (MDI)
Indian School of Business (ISB), Hyderabad
Entrepreneurship Development Institute of India (EDII), Ahmedabad
Amrita Institute of Management (AIM), TN
SP Jain Institute of Management & Research
T A Pai Management Institute (TAPMI) and
……………………………

Who is an Entrepreneur? :

Who is an Entrepreneur? An innovator or developer who recognises and seizes opportunities; converts these opportunities into workable / marketable ideas; adds value through time, effort, money, or skills; assumes the risks of the competitive marketplace to implement these ideas; and realises the rewards from these efforts.

NRI Entrepreneurs :

Slide 13:

Yunus, Grameen Bank win Nobel Peace Prize

SE in Teaching & Research :

SE in Teaching & Research Skoll Center for Social Entrepreneurship (Oxford Said Business School)
Center for Advancement of Social Entrepreneurship (Faqua Business School, Duke University)
Catherine B Reynold Program for Social Entrepreneurship (New York University)
Entrepreneurship in Social Sector Program (Harvard Business School)
Schwab Foundation for Social Entrepreneurs (University of Geneva) and
Social Entrepreneurship Course Series (Stanford University)

Agenda :

Agenda Define Social Entrepreneurship
Multiplier Effect of BOP Entrepreneurship
Social Entrepreneurship
Definition of Social Entrepreneurship
Map of the Field of Social Entrepreneurship
Some Examples of Social Entrepreneurs

Social Entrepreneurship :

Social Entrepreneurship Is an emerging field that offers opportunity to young professionals to create societal / economic value on a sustainable basis
According to some reports, globally this is the fastest growing sector and perhaps the only sector that is creating gainful employment worldwide

Defining Social Entrepreneurship :

Defining Social Entrepreneurship Social Entrepreneurship is the process of recognizing and resourcefully pursuing opportunities to create social value and craft innovative approaches to addressing critical social needs.
By “Social Entrepreneurs,” we mean leaders of social-purpose organizations that demonstrate the following behaviors and values:
focus on impact
primacy of mission
private initiative
willingness to blur sector boundaries
opportunity orientation,
innovation and resourcefulness.

Contents :

Social Entrepreneurship Technical Session I 26 Contents 18 Chapters – 250 pages – Rs 395/-
Took an year to write
Book is not about how to start a company
Entrepreneurship can be deeply rewarding simply as a journey itself.
Entrepreneurship is a creative process and when done successfully, it can give you the highest sense of accomplishment possible

Pages 16-17 :

Social Entrepreneurship Prof Chowdari Prasad
TAPMI, Manipal 27 Pages 16-17 I always like to think of Mother Theresa as one of the greatest entrepreneurs of our time. She started with an angel investment of five rupees in 1948 from the Archbishop of Calcutta.
By the turn of the century, her Missionaries of Charity had 602 homes in 125 countries and her band of 4,000 sisters from as many as 40 different national origins marched to the same mission, vision and core values.
How did she build that institution? What was the impetus? Disease and death that crawled in

Contents…2 :

NC on Social Entrepreneurship August 21, 2009 28 Contents…2 the gutters of Calcutta and nudged her saree each time she walked past?
Was it the negative energy of her surroundings? Or was it the possibility of positive outcomes? Or spreading love, joy, seeing a dying destitute as an angel of peace?
It wasn’t the former. She was to recall later that she had, in fact, ‘received’ her call….